Monday, January 17, 2011

As we celebrate Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr. and all that he stood for, my mind reverberates with his “I Have a Dream” speech.Such a way with words, that guy.One could only dream of having his level of eloquence. The pen is mightier than the sword, and the power to move people with words is indeed a gift.

I am so thankful to be raising my children in a world that is becoming increasingly open minded and less prejudicial.It took brave people like Martin Luther King, Jr. to make this happen.Another brave soul was John Howard Griffin, the author of “Black Like Me.”If you haven’t read it, do.It’s a mind-opening, mind-blowing, mind-changing book.

In an effort to experience life as a black man in the pre-civil rights era, Mr. Griffin, a white man, took medication to darken his skin and also applied dye so that he could pass as a black person.He then traveled throughout the southern United States in a quest for knowledge and understanding.His book “Black Like Me” chronicles his experiences and provides intimate details about what he learned about race relations and the devastating impact racism has on all of us.

After the book was published, Mr. Griffin was hung in effigy in Mansfield, Texas, where he lived at the time of writing the book.I live in Mansfield, Texas today.Fortunately, it’s a much different place now.

Next month, an American Library Association Literary Landmark will be placed by the Friends of the Mansfield Public Library at the city library in honor of John Howard Griffin.As a member of the Friends, I am proud that we have been able to honor such a distinguished, courageous writer.

Just as our lives are enriched when we fill them with a diverse set of people, when I write I love to develop a diverse cast of characters. The heroine of my "Death and Taxes" series is a white country girl who received her first BB gun from her daddy for her third birthday. Now an IRS special agent in Dallas, she's partnered with a conservative black soccer dad. Despite their differences, the two make a kick-ass team. She also teams up with a Latina rookie DEA agent to pursue a mullet-wearing, tax-cheating drug dealer. For a little more fun, I tossed in a chain-smoking boss who dresses like a sixties go-go dancer. Yep, stories are a lot more interesting with a varied cast. So are our lives.

What writers do you most admire?What books have made an impact on you?

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55 comments:

One book I read long ago that I remember making a real impact on me was Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison. More recently I read "The Help" by Kathryn Stockett - another very interesting book about race relations. What makes is so interesting is that it wasn't really so long ago...

The writer that has made the most impact on me is Mary Higgins Clark. The story of how this gracious lady provided for her family and became a famous and well-loved writer is a great inspiration to all women.

'The Colour Purple' will always live in my mind. The story is so real to me because it resembles my life. But not only this, it's written with such simplicity. This is the most difficult thing to achieve in writing - in my opinion.

I *also* admire the eloquence of Dr Martin Luther King. What a man he was!

Some writers that have had an impact on me is Patricia Cornwell and Dan Brown as they are not the type of books that I usually read.They are more intense and have bigger plots and are not books to read before bed. I mostly like books with some humor and not so gory to read in bed.

I always enjoyed Tony Hillerman's novels. They opened up an understanding of Native American culture focused on the Four Corners areaThis was specially intriguing for us as we were stationed in Southern AZ for several years.

I think the book that made the strongest impact on me was The Diary of Anne Frank. I remember reading it when I was her age, over and over. I must have read it about four times in a two week period, each time hoping for a different outcome. I just couldn't believe what happened to her - a girl just my age. It really opened my eyes to the impact someone's madness can have on others.Margay

As a child , the books that made a great impact on me were The Diary of Anne Frank, To Kill A Mockingbird and the biography of Helen Keller. They opened my eyes to the prejudices in the world , but they also opened the doors to my love of reading.

I admire every writer who puts a pen to paper, so to speak. Writing is such a difficult and personal task. The most recent book that made a diffence to me was "The Help" by Kathryn Stockett. Being born in the 70s, it is hard to imagine life during segregation. As a person now living in the South, I am glad that life has changed in terms of race relations so much in such a short time. There is still more to do, but we are far from where we started

I will have to say the book and author that made the biggest impact on me would have to be Gone with the Wind by Margaret Mitchell, because this is the book that really got me started reading. It introduced me to a totally different world. The world or reading and traveling in books.

I can not think of an author who has made a personal impact on me or my life other than to provide some enjoyment. Though I have read some darker non-fiction work like The Diary of Anne Frank as many have mentioned, but I already knew quite a bit about the atrocities lessening it's impact on me perhaps (actually seeing the camps made much more of an impression).

I know I've learned things along the way, I am a font of trivia which occasionally comes in handy.

I too love Tony Hillerman's novels, not only because of the cultural insights, but also because of the vivid descriptions of the land. Another excellent writer dealing with native American settings is Margaret Coel. In terms of the South and history, I fell in love with "Gone with the Wind" and I later read a very good novel "Jubilee" billed as the flipside of Scarlet's journey.

Great post. I have a long list of books to read. However, I just got my Rita books to judge. So, I'm going to have lots of reading to do. Amazinly, I usually find a new author I just love, when I judge, so I can't wait.

I have to agree with several others in the post "To Kill a Mockingbird" had the greatest impact on me. I was born and raised in a small southern town; yet, I could have never imagined this occurring. But prejudices did exist and were passed onto me. I was taught never to marry outside your race. I often questioned my parents if this was a prejudice but was told “God did not intend for us to marry of different color”. Oh, how wrong they were/are. I am thankful to have married a great man who helped me understand the true blessings of a marriage. We teach our children to marrying someone who will love, cherish and honor you... no matter what their color.

The older Classics have made an impact on me. The Diary of Anne Frank, I also read young and was just mesmerized by that book, I could not fathom how she survived as long as she and the others did! I love all the romance books written by Jane Austen, Bronte, etc.

The Grapes of Wrath and To Kill a Mockingbird were books that made me want to get an English degree in college. They were emotional reads that opened up all sorts of conversation between people. I loved being able to debate them and seeing bits of myself in the stories. They have left an impression on me to this day and I still read them once a year every year.

Louis Nizer's Reflections Without Mirrors: An Autobiography of the Mind made a huge impression on me when I was a kid. I just read it again last year and was still awed by it. The man was an amazing writer, and so much of what he said back then is still so relevant today.

Thanks to everyone for posting! I know now that I have to read "The Help." Still not sure whether I'm emotionally equipped to read "Diary of Anne Frank." Sad things, especially when violence is involved, tend to haunt me. And reading for entertainment only is just fine, Anne! On the whole, I tend to like things that are simply enjoyable, too, without too much deeper purpose. But occasionally I venture deeper, like I did with "Black Like Me," and find a real gem. I hope you all had a nice MLK holiday! I spent it on a plane coming home from Seattle where I spoke on taxes to the Greater Seattle RWA chapter. What a great bunch! Lots of talent and business savvy up there!

Oh, I can relate to the a chain-smoking boss who dresses like a sixties go-go dancer. I remember having one of those. hahaha!

I read a story when I was in my early teens that had a different sort of impact on me. It was Helter Skelter: The True Story of the Manson Murders. Creepy, creepy, and very sad story. Ever since then, I can't read any stories with violence or lots of blood. Can't watch fighter on TV. Oh, and I can't watch scary movies either.

I've read so much from such an early time, that I can't pin it down to just a single book or even a single author. I'm grateful to all the authors whose works became a part of my psyche and broaden my mind and opened my heart.

A recent set of books I have read that made an impact are the Wicked series by Gregory Macguire. On the surface they seem to be Wizard of Oz retellings. But when you pay attention they are really a study on society and government today.

I remember in high school we had to read Shakespeare and we were all dreading it. Our English teacher, who was from England, fully explained all the words, phrases and terms used and we all understood the plays. It made an impact on me in that I realized how a good teacher could determine understanding.

To be honest, Stephen King has had the most impact on me. The man is a mad genius, and when I first read his stories (I started with The Dead Zone at the impressionable age of 12), they opened up the possibility of...more. That we can get more out of life, that there's more in life, than anyone imagines. And the man himself is an inspiration. He's used writing all his life to overcome obstacle after addiction after tragic accident. He's an inspiration.

I do read The Diary of Anne Frank in high school too. I also watched the movies. I've read Little House on the Prairie books, Tom Sawyer, and Huckleberry Finn. I've never read the book you mentioned, but sounds like I need to.

When I was a teen, my sister who knew I read so much, gave me ROOTS to read by Alex Hailey. I took that one weekend and I could never get up off the couch to do anything til I got to the end of it. I was totally moved that all this was based on his family history that he wrote this story and I learned so much from that history as well as the strength of Kunte Kinte. I so need to plan to read this again, its been too long and its a very moving book.

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